Caprock
By
S.J.beres
ISBN
1-58898-916-X
Thegreatpublished.com
2003, Paper, 204
pages
"Block poked the barrels of the
shotgun into the light at the same time he pulled back the hammers.
The distinctive metallic clicks caused the outlaws to freeze
momentarily and Josh took the opportunity to introduce himself.
"Freeze, gentlemen! I am a U.S.
Marshall and you are under arrest…"
Joshua Block lives his job, but
tempers justice with common sense. His beat is the Llano
Estacado, the Staked Plains of northern Texas. It's nothing but
thousands of square miles of nothing if you except the rent in the
earth called Palo Duro Canyon. It's a great desert, big enough
to hide a stolen herd of cattle and the secret of Coronado's gold, but
is it big enough to hide murder, kidnapping and mysterious doorways to
another world?
Caprock
is a rousing-great tale of adventure told in clear, well-written
prose. It offers the reader several mysteries, hints of the
supernatural, a tiny touch of romance and you can't put it down until
the end. Joshua Block is a well-developed, sympathetic character
this reader hopes to meet again.
A.H.Holt, editor
WesternFictionReview
June 2004
Redemption
By Morgan J.
Blake
ISBN-1-59105-203-3 (e-book)
ISBN-1-59105-228-9 (paperback)
Wylie's mother is brutally murdered.
His sister Cara, his friend Jaylene and several others are kidnapped.
As he steels himself to examine his mother's wounds he begins to
suspect that blaming Apaches for the raid is much too simple.
Gus Lundgren an old friend of Wylie
and his mother, reacts with a mixture of shock and anger when Wylie
tells him about his mother's death and enlists his aid in tracking the
kidnapped women. Lundgren refuses to join Wylie in tracking the
raiders but lends him a huge sorrel, his best trail horse.
Then there's Annie. She's introduced to Wylie as Lundgren's
adopted daughter, but something is not right. As long as he has
known Lundgren, Wylie has never heard of a daughter before. Even
more strangely, when Wylie leaves his ranch Gus signals to a man with
sandy-blond hair to follow his young friend.
Cara, Jaylene and six other women and girls are tired, dirty and often
hungry. Endless hours of riding take them steadily south, closer
to Mexico and a life of degradation. Cara works to help Jaylene
and the others keep their spirits up as she watches for a chance to
escape.
Wylie's introduction to the town of Redemption includes the sight of a
mutilated dog that has been slashed to ribbons and left to die slowly
and miserably. A few moments later, he has to fight an
outlaw named Dossey and an unknown white-haired man to save Maria de
la Rosa from their unwanted attentions.
Redemption is fast moving and riveting but dark. Blake has
created characters full of evil and degeneration. Some of them
have few redeeming human qualities. Other characters are
courageous men and women who fight this evil with all of their might.
Wylie's quest to save Cara and the other women for a miserable life of
slavery provides continued suspense. The reader will find
mystery on every page of this action-packed story. It was hard
to stop turning pages until the end to find out who was really behind
the murders and kidnapping.
A.H.Holt, editor
WesternFictionReview
June 2004
Kansas
Dreamer: Fury in Sumner County
By K. Follis
Cheatham
ISBN
0-9714287-2-7
Kaios Books
Helena, Montana
2002, paper, 259
pages, $16.95
Ellen Hargrove had dreams -- dreams
that frightened her and set her apart from her family and her
neighbors. She dreamed of death. Ellen's dreams made her
seem strange to everyone, even her closest family. When her
husband Johnny was killed, she had fore seen his death by drowning,
but her dreams never told her why he would even be near that river.
When word came that Johnny was dead his mother and father wanted Ellen
out of the way -- gone from the house. She could never
understand why they were so adamant that she should leave and leave
quickly.
Ellen finds the body of Cattleman Frances Stone and her dreams tell
her that James Montgomery is the murderer. She was afraid to
tell. When more men are murdered, Ellen knows she must try to
prove her dreams are true.
K. Follis Cheatham is an accomplished poet and writes both fiction and
non-fiction using as most authors do, her family, friends, neighbors
and their ancestors as grist for her mill. She is the author of
Spotted Flower and the Pokonomita, The Crocodile, The Advent of
Elizabeth Fortune, and several other books. She is an active
member and volunteer in Western Writers of America.
Kansas Dreamer: Fury in Sumner County
is firmly rooted in the history of the area and is a truly fine read.
The main character, Ellen Hargrove, captures the readers' imagination
immediately. The well drawn supporting characters, the clear
description of the setting and plenty of fast-paced action hold the
readers' interest throughout the book.
A.H.Holt, editor
WesternFictionReview
June 2004
Echoes of
Vengeance
Book one of the
Valediction for Revenge Series
By Roland Cheek,
http://www.RolandCheek.com
ISBN
0-918981-08-05
Skyline
Publishing
Columbia Falls,
Montana
2002, Trade
Paper, 256 pages, $14.95
Echoes of Vengeance opens as an
intruder rudely awakens Major Calumet Cornelius Bates from his whiskey
induced sleep. Breathlessly watching as the tip of the barrel of
a Sharpes almost touches his face.
Jethro Spring takes his revenge on Bates for the slaughter of his
parents and runs for his life. Wounded and starving, he is rescued by
a Cherokee woman with reasons of her own for helping him. Jethro
continues to run and hide until he is captured and befriended by a
Texas Ranger.
From working as a dockhand in New Orleans to entering boxing rings in
Fort Worth, Texas to the timbered slopes of the Olympic peninsula,
Jethro Spring matures and changes. He becomes the friend of Chinese
immigrants and finally friend and protector of Chinese railroad
workers in Colorado.
Roland Cheek has created a remarkably attractive and sympathetic
character in Jethro Spring. Jethro, along with the variety of
settings Cheek employs and the strong and interesting supporting
characters he creates will sustain this story through book after book.
As a reader you can always expect a fast-moving, riveting story that
holds your interest to the very last page and makes you feel impatient
for the next book in the Valediction for Revenge Series.
Bloody
Merchants' War
By Roland Cheek
Book 2 of the
Valediction for Revenge Series
ISBN-0-918981-09-3
Skyline
Publishing
2003, Trade paper
288 pages $14.95
On August 6, 1877, Jethro Spring rode into Lincoln County New Mexico
Territory and became an important player in the event history calls
the "Lincoln County War." Roland Cheek has written a rousing
tale of good and evil, loyalty and treachery and hard choices.
Jethro is himself a fugitive. Both sides in the Lincoln County
war want to hire his gun. Dolan and Riley on one side and Chisum
and McSween on the other and a "Santa Fe ring" in between.
Farmers and Mexicans are at the mercy of the guns on both sides.
Jethro finally chooses sides, but then must question if he has chosen
the right one.
Cheek offers a fast-moving carefully and densely woven story.
Surprisingly, he makes the reader like and wish to support Billy the
Kid and thoroughly dislike some of the characters other views of the
Lincoln County War praise. Cheek allows the reader to see the
evil in other characters before his character does creating
breath-taking suspense and a great read.
A.H.Holt, editor
WesternFictionReview
June 2004
Echoes of a
Silent River
By Rebekah Fawn
Cochran
ISBN
1-59113-370-X
2002, paper, 238
pages
This book brings the reader a part of the story of the People told in
their own voices. The words of Strikes-Standing, Angel May and
Old Man--the word picture of the massacre painted by Wrens Song give
the words and the story an unexpectedly sharp edge.
"Our stories were and are the life songs
making no noise,
Until they break through the ground
to reach the sky and our tongues."
The dignity, cadence and resonance of the lines Rebekah Fawn Cochran
has created are a perfect way to tell the story of the largest
massacre of Native Americans in the history of the United States.
Echoes of a Silent River is a powerful tale of fiction that is
beautifully interwoven with the true story of the Bear River Massacre.
It tells this poignant story as if seen through eyes of the people
most affected. Cochran brings to life through her poems what she
describes as 'echoes' of courage, honor, desperation, and humor.
Intertwined throughout is the quirky love story of Josiah Bliss and a
mysterious fire-haired woman.
A.H.Holt, editor
WesternFictionReview
June 2004
Liar's
Trail
By C.K.Crigger
Amber Quill
Press, LLC
ISBN
ISBN-1-59279-143-3
2003
"It was her way with the dog that
decided him. How she told the rough-coated, one-ear-up
one-ear-down mutt to stay with the wagon using only a slight hand
signal. Except somehow, at the same time, she turned the command
into a caress."
Gincy Tate posts an advertisement for a man that would be willing to
help her father trail a herd of about fifty horses and mules to the
army at Fort Spokane. Her father visits the saloon and has a
confrontation with William Blau. Blau holds a mortgage on Quiet
Woman Ranch ranch. He arrogantly lets Tate know that he wants to
add Gincy to the collateral and is determined to foreclose. He
believes no one in town will question his actions because Gincy is
part Indian.
Two men, Sawyer Kennett, a gray-eyed cowboy riding a big roan horse
and Elmer Fitch, rough in appearance, experienced in handling horses,
but smelling of horse manure, answer the ad. Leery of both men,
but desperate to get the horses to the fort and get enough money to
pay the mortgage, Gincy knows she has no choice but to hire them.
Facing rumors of an Indian uprising on the way to Fort Spokane and
doubting the loyalty of both of the newly hired cowboys, Gincy is
determined to fulfil her father's contract with the army and save her
ranch. William Blau is every bit as determined to take control
of Quiet Woman Creek Ranch and Gincy.
Gincy hides as someone tries to set the house on fire. Later
horses and mules get away from their lead ropes and crazy things begin
to happen. The wagon is smashed. Gincy's dog is shot. One
of the men riding with the herd has to be working for William Blau.
C.K.Crigger creates interesting, appealing and fully formed characters
that grab and hold the reader's attention. Liar's Trail is full
of fast-paced action and a delightful touch of romance. It's a great
read, hard to put down to the end.
A.H.Holt, editor
WesternFictionReview
June 2004
The Quality
of Clemency
By Judith Genandt
ISBN
1-58851-338-6
America House
Baltimore,
Maryland
2001, Trade
Paper,
237 pages, $19.95
A stranger comes to Miss Clemency
Taylor's door to answer a newspaper ad. The homestead needs lots
of work, and Clemmy's young brothers and sister are determined to get
someone to help them with the care of the cattle and horses and upkeep
of the ranch. The stranger who answers the ad gives his name as
Eben Harris. This man has a secret, a dark, hidden mystery that
stands between his growing love for Clemency and his regard for her
whole family.
But the truth can't be kept hidden.
Events reveal the devils' bargain that brought Eben to the Taylor
ranch. When Clemency discovers why Eben answered the ad her
siblings put in the paper she displays inspiring strength and courage.
She discovers that the man she is fast growing to love is a tool of
her enemies, yet she must fight to protect her family and their
livelihood.
Water is at a premium in Wyoming in 1892. Cattle baron Sylvester
Burchfield owns the land that borders the Taylor ranch. He is
determined to own the Taylor outfit with its abundant water and green
fields. He is not above using every way possible, even spying,
shooting from ambush and kidnapping to get what he wants.
Love, treachery, love and loyalty fill the pages of this well-crafted
story. Judy Genandt has given the reader well-rounded,
interesting and admirable characters and an exciting page-turner of a
tale that is sure to interest the whole family.
A.H.Holt, editor
WesternFictionReview
June 2004
Texas
Victory
By Denzel Holmes
& Tom Schliesing
ISBN
1-932196-09-9
Wordwright.biz
Georgetown, Texas
2003, Trade
Paper,
344 pages, $21.95
When it is reported that he is killed
in battle, Prince Carl Von Altman is deposed in favor of his brother.
Prince Carl is determined to regain his life and position. Even
as he begins to realize the conspiracy against him, he also begins to
understand the plight of the people of his Principality. Life is
hard in the Palatine, and large numbers of people gather around the
deposed prince, even master craftsmen and professional men. They
want to leave, to emigrate to the Republic of Texas and establish a
colony, and they want Prince Carl to lead them.
When Carl's son Hans dies, he takes with him Prince Carl's real reason
to fight to regain his throne. Finally, he agrees to lead the
colony to Texas if he can force his brother and the rest of the
government to help pay the expenses.
This wonderful story of the adventures of Prince Carl Von Altman, his
family and his little band of German colonists introduces the reader
to a little known part of the history of Texas and of Western America.
The reader follows Carl and the settlers as they leave old Europe and
experience the trials and pain of the long sea voyage to their new
life. The exhausted and fearful settlers travel overland from
their landing to settle near the New Braunfels community. The
story also follows the changes these experiences make in the character
of Prince Carl. The authors developed this character's life
story so well that the reader sees Prince Carl von Altman as a real,
universal and fascinating human being.
Denzel Holmes and Tom Schliesing have
created a gripping and epic story of love and fear, opulence and
privation, peace and strife. Texas Victory thrills the
reader as it makes Texas history come to life.
A.H.Holt, editor
WesternFictionReview
June 2004
Massacre at
Bend-in-the-River
By Michael J.
Kahman
Virtual Books
College Station,
Texas
2003, paper, 109
pages, $12.95
"He had a way of looking at you, and
then through you. He spoke too softly for a man, I often had to
strain to hear him, and he had a kind of a half grin on his face so
you never knew what to make of him. If you judged by appearance
he was unremarkable except for a white streak just above his
hairline…"
Emmert Shannon rode into Summit County Texas seeking work. He
stayed to capture the mind of a boy and a woman's heart. Emmert
was a veteran of the "Great War" that is, the American war some call
Civil. He was a warrior, a sharpshooter.
Mat Koenig was master of the largest spread in the country, that
spread was called Bend-in-the-River. He owned the bank in
Springdale and he wanted the widow Preston and her ranch any way he
could get her.
This story moves so fast that the reader must stop occasionally to
remember to breathe. Michael Kahman has written a wonderful
old-fashioned western. Emmert is a true western hero, the strong
man who rides into town from some unknown place and rights wrongs.
It is fascinating to follow each step as he plans and executes his
battle against the rich and powerful Mat Koenig. This story
should be longer. I want to know more.
A.H.Holt, editor
WesternFictionReview
June 2004
Two Guns
for Paradise
By Brian D.
Kelling
ISBN
1-59374-016-6
Whiskey Creek
Press
Lusk, Wyoming
2003, paper, 184
pages, $14.95
Five years in Yuma at hard labor -- five years of breaking rock with a
double-jack and dragging a ball and chain. Hack was finally
free, but so badly beaten by guards he lay unconscious in the road.
A family of Mormans who were passing
by picked him up and cared for him. He regained consciousness in
their wagon, tended by a girl named Jenna. Jenna Frazier was a
Morman woman, but she was also thin, well built, with long black hair.
Hank stayed with the Morman family as they traveled to Salt Lake City
to let his wounds heal. The Saints bid him goodbye by completely
outfitting him for the trail. They gave him a gray horse, a
rifle and the gear he needed to live and travel. As he left Salt
Lake Hack promised to come back for Jenna. He left riding slow because
his broken ribs still pained him with rough movement. He was
headed for Prescott and Giles David. Revenge a place to hide and
Jenna; that's all Hack wanted out of life.
Two Guns for Paradise
is Brian D. Kellings third in a continuing series of Westerns, all set
in different states. His other books, Wind of the Mountain and
The Long Canyon Mountains are also available from Whiskey Creek
Kelling travels to each and every
setting he writes about. He explores as he researches, plots his
story, and gets the feel of the country. His work is clearly
authentic. He has owned horses; panned for gold, built his own
tipi and followed the old trails. Two Guns for Paradise is a
hard-hitting and fast-moving story that will keep the reader riveted
to the pages until Hack and Jenna are safe.
A.H.Holt, editor
WesternFictionReview
June 2004
The Tender
Ties Historical Series
By Jane
Kirkpatrick
Roundup Magazine says "Jane Kirkpatrick's stories tug at a reader's
heartstrings" and describes her as being "well known for her
poetic prose as well as her historical accuracy." She certainly lives
up to that praise in this series.
The Tender Ties Historical Series
includes Ms. Kirkpatrick's tenth, eleventh and twelfth books.
The three books are full of strong, well-developed and memorable
characters presented in smooth, beautifully crafted prose. They
are a treat to read and impossible to put down. Each of the three
books can stand alone as fine stories in their own right, but together
they give the reader an in-depth understanding of Marie Toupin and an
inspiring respect for the courage and strength of which women are
capable.
I had the opportunity to read the
three books in order, one after the other. That was a treat and
is the best way to enjoy reading them. However, individually or
as volume one, two and three of the Tender Ties Historical series: the
story of the life of Marie Dorian Toupin, Jane Kirkpatrick has given
her readers another triumph
(1)
A Name of Her Own
By Jane Kirkpatrick
ISBN 1-57856-499-9
WaterBrook Press
Colorado Springs, Colorado
2002, paper, 382 pages, $13.99
In A Name of Her Own Marie forges a friendship with Sacagawea
as she and her family cross the continent in a fur expedition into the
northwest.
(2)
Every Fixed Star
By Jane Kirkpatrick
ISBN 1-57856-500-6
WaterBrook Press
Colorado Springs, Colorado
2003, paper, 410 pages, $13.99
Marie faces other trials in Every Fixed Star. Her love is
gone. One child has disappeared and another is estranged.
It is no wonder she begins to question her worthiness as a human
being.
(3)
Hold Tight the Thread
By Jane Kirkpatrick
ISBN 1-57856-501-4
WaterBrook Press
Colorado Springs, Colorado
2004, paper, 391 pages, $14.99
Marie pulls together the threads of her life, attempting to resolve
the conflicts of her family and friends, including British settlers,
Americans, Missionaries, fur trappers, French Canadian farmers and
Native Americans. Finally, she learns the magic of unconditional love.
.
A.H.Holt, editor
WesternFictionReview
June 2004
The Search
for Hezekiah's Gold
By Carol Lavelle
ISBN 0-5952145-4
iUniverse
Lincoln, Nebraska
2002, trade
paper, 238 pages, $14.95
There were only seven people left in
Last Chance, Colorado. It was Christmas eve; bitter cold and
everything was covered in snow. The snow shut down the few mines still
in operation around Lost Chance. Smart miners had left for
Denver to wait out the snow. They would not return until the
thaw. No matter how much the Ned stoked the stove; the
temperature stayed below twenty degrees.
Ned Thompson, Patrick, Gus the Storekeeper, Bessie Hadley and her sons
Jonathan, Jason and Willie were a little edgy. The wind wailed
around the saloon. The lamp weakly illuminated the table, but
the corners of the room were cast in gloom. Just when the clock struck
midnight Hezekiah came in the door. The opening filled the room
with frigid air.
The cover blurb of The Search for
Hezekiah's Gold asks, was Hezekiah a ghost? -- was he an illusion?--an
apparition that appeared to all seven residents of Lost Chance at the
same time? If he wasn't real, where did the books come from?
This was an enjoyable read. The
characters are rounded and interesting. Carol Lavelle has crafted a
fine story that clearly respects the reader's intelligence, allowing
room for his or her participation in the conclusion.
A.H.Holt, editor
WesternFictionReview
June 2004
The
McKannahs
By Rick Magers
Grizzly Books
ISBN
2004
The McKannah's is the epic story of a tough Irish family that
settles in nineteenth century California. It tells the plight of
the Spanish Californios whose culture was crushed by the land-hungry
Anglos, and chronicles the tragic devastation of California's Native
Americans by the settlers' greed and prejudice.
Sean McKannah was born in Ireland. When his family is killed in
a fire he runs away to sea to find a better life. He is
befriended by the captain of his ship and supported by this friend as
he matures. McKannah leaves the sea in California to go gold
hunting. He falls in love, marries, has a family and makes his place
in California. This is the thrilling story of his adventures and
adventures of his sons.
One of Sean's sons becomes a Texas Ranger. Two become lawyers.
Another is an honest professional gambler. His very special
fifth son, Jesse -- Jesse becomes the legendary "White Buffalo,"
friend to the California Native Americans.
Neither the Irish, the Californios
nor the Native Americans were fully accepted by other Americans during
the nineteenth century. Magers has woven a great story around
the triumphs and tragedies of the settlement of western America.
The McKannah's is a mixture of historical fact and well-crafted
fiction that holds the reader's interest to the last page and leaves
you wishing for more.
A.H.Holt, editor
WesternFictionReview
June 2004
The Lawman
and the Lady
By Tera Lee
Mattera
ISBN
0-9721574-1-7
Cody Ben Taylor
Publishing
Fresno,
California
2003, trade
paper, 292 pages, $14.99
"The smell of cordite and the tingle
of romance fill the air in nineteenth century California when Deputy
Sheriff Cody Benjamin Taylor and Nurse Gina Angelica Tufano are thrown
together in a savage struggle for their very survival."
First her father dies, then her mother
is gone. With both of her parents dead Gina Tufano leaves
New York to make her home in Sonora with her Aunt Mary Sciaroni. She
finally arrives in Sonora after an arduous journey across the
continent by train and stagecoach. There is no one to meet her.
Soon she learns that her aunt, her only relative is dead as well.
She is completely alone in the world.
Gina moves into her aunt's house and finds a job nursing for the town
Doctor. Almost as soon as she settles in she is threatened by a
psychopath and is forced to rely on Cody Benjamin Taylor, the deputy
sheriff.
She had despised Cody as an arrogant boy when she visited Sonora five
years earlier, but she soon learned how much he had changed. This man
stood fast against a mob and worked to make the streets of Sonora
safe. The story of Gina and Cody is interwoven with the history of
Sonora and the surrounding area. This is an interesting view of
early California with lots of action and romance.
Tera Lee Mattera is a Fresno California native. She is currently
working on a sequel to The Lawman and the Lady.
A.H.Holt, Editor
WesternFictionReview
May 2004
My Horse
Got a Flat
By Cary G.
Neumiller
ISBN
0-595-29490-1
IUniverse
Lincoln, Nebraska
2003, paper, 106
pages, $9.95
My Horse Got a Flat is a collection of cowboy stories--real cowboy
stories. Cary Neumiller manages to make the reader laugh out
loud as he conveys the piquant flavor of the life of the modern
cowboy.
Neumiller's stories make it easy for the reader to see the horse
carrying a boy around a corral by holding his shoulder in his teeth.
You will definitely hear the pick-up trucks rattle. Big-hairy
girls working in carnivals, understanding proper cowboy hats, why
cowboys move cattle in snowstorms and the fine art of lying are well
explained in these wonderful humorous stories.
This writer's deft handling of more
than a touch of comedy and his fine ear for voices give this book
great staying power. I read it through in one sitting as though
it were a novel and enjoyed every word.
A.H.Holt, Editor
WesternFictionReview
June 2004
No
Preservatives Added
By Donna Penley
Haysville, Kansas
1998, paper
This cowgirl poet has traveled all across the country performing her
poetry. I had the privilege of hearing her recite a poem about a
"real cowboy" when visiting the Haysville, Kansas Library. We
were a small group of writers gathered around in a circle of chairs,
talking about the business of writing, publishing and promoting.
Donna was one of our group. She
offered to recite and was welcomed. The group listened raptly,
chuckled two or three times and applauded with fervor when she
finished. Both the words and the performance were a treat.
Donna is also a horse trainer and involved with horsemanship for the
handicapped. She works with the Burning Sage Ranch at Haysville,
Kansas.
"UnCow ponies" and "Rodeo Romance," spurs and chores and second
chances attract Donna's muse and her verses paint pictures of the
cowboy life. She makes the reader see the sun on the Kansas
flint hills, and their own dream house. "Noticing Things" is the
essence of poetry, and this poet's thoughts and dreams give the reader
a delightful view of life in south central Kansas.
A.H.Holt, editor
WesternFictionReview
June 2004
BACK
Comanche
Captive
By Don Smart &
Mary Joe Clendenin
ISBN
0-9701-488-2-8
Clendenin Books
Stephenville,
Texas
2003, paper, 156
pages
This book is rooted in the true story
of the captivity of Juana Cavasos by the Comanches. Little
information is available about the actual events of Juana's years
living with the Native Americans, so the writers carefully researched
the parallel history of the area and the involvement of Sam Houston.
The activities of the Native Americans and Juana in the camp where her
captors enslaved her appear as authentic as research and imagination
can render them.
Juana Cavasos and her twin brother
Juan were the youngest of the five children of a wealthy Spaniard.
When Juana was only six years old the family moved to a ranch on the
border of Texas and Mexico. Juana was not content to sit in the house
and play the lady. She found a way to learn to ride, and
explored the ranch. Her determination and strength of character were
obvious even when she was a child. She grew into a strong,
independent young woman and an outstanding equestrian.
When visiting her cousins in Olnieto
Juana is yanked up by her hair and thrown across a horse in front of a
member of a Comanche raiding party. She is swept away into the
wilds to be made a slave. Although she was used to a life of
wealth and ease, Juana's courage and fortitude kept her alive and gave
her the strength to devise and implement a plan to gain her freedom
and return to her family.
Don Smart and Mary Joe Clendenin have
produced a finely crafted story that thrills and inspires. They
make Juana and her ordeal real to the reader and demonstrate a fine
respect for the Comanche's way of life.
A.H.Holt, editor
WesternFictionReview
June 2004
Deliverance
Valley
By Gladys Smith
ISBN
1-931-291-27-6
Log Cabin Books
Hamilton, Montana
2003, trade
paper, 256 pages
Retired schoolteacher and amateur archeologist Gladys Smith won the
Willa Cather Literary award with her first novel River of No
Return. Deliverance Valley is also a story of a hard but
beautiful land and the trials of the human heart.
On his deathbed Gabe confesses to his sister Jessie that he has
gambled away his ranch.
His horses will
have to be sold to pay his debts. He also confesses that his
beautiful fourteen-year-old daughter Kitty is really the Jessies
child. Jessie is stunned to learn that the girl she thought of
as her niece is her daughter--the infant daughter her husband told her
was born dead as Jessie lay near death at the child's birth. Her
husband lied, and her brother had kept the truth from her for fourteen
years.
Jessie is heartbroken as she helplessly watches her brother die.
She is also full of anger that she was lied to for so many years.
Kitty is heartbroken that not only is her father is dying and leaving
her alone, but she may also lose her beloved horses. Afraid and
rebellious, the young girl steals away into the wilderness with the
entire herd. Jessie must find Kitty and the horses somewhere in
the wilds of Montana. Is it possible she will also find love?
This story is well paced, authentic and full of life. It's a
great read for adults and accessible for young teens. Gladys Smith's
may well win another award for Deliverance Valley.
A.H.Holt, editor
WesternFictionReview
June 2004
With the
Right Person
By R. Whitfield
ISBN
0-595-16384-X
iUniverse
Lincoln, Nebraska
2001, Trade
Paper, 234 pages, $14.95
It is the middle 1860s. When Indians killed her mother, father,
and little brother, Nicole Walker was ready to give up hope. The
Indian who reached out his hand to grab her fell to the ground at her
feet as she heard the report of a gunshot. Jim Becker, the tall
man dressed in buckskins she had seen in the town, rode into the
middle of the small war party firing a pistol with each hand.
Nicole's adventure begins at that massacre. Every member of her
family is dead. She is alone in the vast wilderness of the
prairie. Her rescuer takes her to safety at his home in
Colorado. It is only a matter of weeks before they fall in love
and begin to share a life of personal growth.
This story follows the spiritual growth experienced by Jim and Nicole
as they fight the prejudices and indifference of white settlers and
military men against their Native American friends. They
gradually learn that they can make a difference in their world, and
that their true strength and abilities lie in the fact that they have
each found the right person to share their lives.
Ron Whitfield has created an interesting and sweet love story that
parallels the instructive struggle of two people who are determined to
grow as human beings until they realize their true potential.
A.H.Holt, editor
WesternFictionReview
June 2004
Boomerang
By Adam W.
Wiktorek
iUniverse
2001, trade
paper, 319 pages, $17.95
It started with the waifs living and fighting for food and shelter in
the streets of New York and other large cities of the east.
Do-gooders, mostly ministers and missionaries dreamed up the
institution they dubbed "Orphan Trains." The managers of these
trains swept up children of all ages, many orphaned by the ills of
poverty and a devastating flu epidemic.
The children were all supposed to go to Christian homes -- to
childless couples who would give them the love and care they deserved
and desperately needed. The lucky children went to couples who
really wanted them. True Christians, willing to offer strangers
a home and a replacement family. The unlucky ones went to men and
women who were little more than slavers.
Boomerang is the story of Jacob, the youngest of a family of orphaned
children who were sent west on the Orphan Train. When he is
released from bitter servitude and abuse by the death of his adopted
father Jacob sets out on the cold trail of his real family.
This story is a heartbreaking commentary on the evil that lives in the
heart of some men and women and the simple goodness in others.
To imagine that Jacob would eventually find every single one of his
family and that they would all be well, is stretching the plot
considerably, but I couldn't stop reading. Boomerang flows well.
History and fiction are deftly intertwined to create an excellent
read.
A.H.Holt, editor
WesternFictionReview
May 2004
JESS
By Gary Yates
ISBN
0-595-17889-8
iUniverse
Lincoln, Nebraska
2001, paper, 192
pages, $13.95
Gary Yates opens the door to understanding the life of a modern
cowboy. He follows Jess Cogden as he drives his battered pickup around
the west, moving from job to job.
The author of JESS spent many years working as a "hired man on
horseback" on large ranches in Wyoming, Montana, Idaho, California and
Nevada. His first hand knowledge makes his story of Jess and his
reaction to the rancher's abuse of public lands ring true.
Jess finally realizes he has wandered away half his life with little
to show for it. He finds a job he loves living at a camp by a
lake created by a beaver dam. Mule deer come to the lake to
drink and a hawk has made the meadow and the grove of Aspens his
hunting ground. In this lonely cow camp Jess puzzles as he remembers
the outrageous acts of disregard for public lands and wildlife he has
witnessed in his travels.
When Jess meets a beauty named Maureen and a charmer named Kathy they
work their way into his life and his heart. He disagrees with
and is embarrassed by the attitudes of a few ranchers and their uses
of public lands. His forest ranger friend causes the ranchers
trouble and is transferred because of political pressure.
Finally, Jess takes a stand against his anti-environment employer and
right in the middle of his own problems Maureen and Kathy disappear.
This is a great story. It illuminates an important and pressing
problem in the modern west. Yates has done a good job of making
his characters interesting and teaching the critical lessons of
protecting the environment in a strong story. The reader absorbs
the "protect the environment" lessons without hurting the flow of the
book. An enjoyable read, interesting plot with characters that
are real enough to hold the readers' interest to the very end.
A.H.Holt, editor
WesternFictionReview
June 2004